Rough avens (Geum laciniatum) flowers and fruit. Upper left, lower left, lower right: flowers with a profusion of stamens and pistils. Note that the sepals are much longer than the petals. Upper right: mature fruit with the persistent sepals below the ball of expanded ovaries and pistils.
Rough avens flowers are 1/2″ wide, with five triangular green sepals longer than the petals, five cream or white, circular petals with narrow attachments, and numerous (25-120) stamens with (initially) cream-colored anthers distributed around a central gumdrop-shaped mound of green carpels with long styles. The fruit is more or less spheroid, 3/4″ across, and covered with long, hooked spines (actually, persistent styles) that help the seeds attach to clothing and animal fur. Note that some sources identify this species as Geum virginianum, but G. virginianum is the cream avens according to the USDA Plants database; Hilty (ILW) lists G. virginianum as “restricted to southern Illinois”. The two species are very similar, but G. lacinatum has very hairy stems and hairless receptacles and G. virginianum has smaller flowers (1/3″) with cream-colored petals dwarfed by the sepals. Rough avens is distinguished from white avens (G. canadense, also found in Jackson Park) by petals that are shorter than the sepals and their very hairy flower stalks; rough avens also blooms earlier than whte avens.
Rough avens (Geum laciniatum) leaves. The lower stem leaves are odd-pinnately compound with five leaflets (upper right); the upper stem leaves have three lobes of varying depths, never full separating.
Rough avens stems are light green, round in section, and covered with coarse, spreading hairs. Both the basal leaves and the the lower stem leaves are odd-pinnate, usually with five leaflets, each up to 3″ long and 2.5′ across; they have stout petioles. The upper stem leaves are alternate, nearly sessile, and simple, although they may be deeply-lobed and bear coarse serrations.
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